First off, hi everyone! Glad to be a new member of the community!
I have been wanting to pick up a hobby that involves woodworking but I don't have a ton of money for tools (student). I knew i wanted to make something cool and interesting, not just a table or a chair. I decided on a bow.
After scouring the web and finding build-alongs like the
Red Oak Flatbow presented at poorfolkbows.com and the
pyramid bow build on tradgang.com.
I understand the basics of picking a board with the straightest possible grain (probably the most important part from what i read), as well as the basics of laying out the design, roughing out the shape, adding a riser, and tillering with a tillering tree/stick (the most important part of the actual construction from what i read).
The thing i am still hung up on is what tools to get. Some people say all you need is a Stanley Surform Rasp, others say that is garbage and to use a Shinto Saw Rasp (coarse on one side, fine on the other), some say you need a hatchet or a draw blade for the roughing, some say to use a planer and others say planers are total sh*t. The only thing i have seen consistent is that everyone agrees a cabinet scraper (or just a scraper) is very useful.
From my research here is the list of tools i have put together and their purposes, i am sure i have missed a metric boatload of possible tools and i completely left out powertools because i know they are out of my price range.:
Mass wood removal/ Major Roughing:Draw knife
farriers rasp
coping saw
hatchet (bearded?)
Detailed roughing/Rough tillering:Stanley Surform rasp
9" Shinto Saw Rasp
Detailed Tillering, nocks, arrow rest:Stanley 21-113 4-In-1 File
Other files? - half round, flat, rat tail, bastard, chainsaw
scraper (cabinet scraper?)
Other Necessary Tools:C Clamps
Tightbond II
Sandpaper
Backing Materials: sheetrock tape (otherwise known as drywall tape)
linen
silk
leather?
Like i said at the beginning i just want to ease myself into this hobby as cheaply as possible. I set a budget for myself of around 60 dollars and i want to get at minimum (in order from most wood removal to least):
1) something that will remove wood quickly for roughing, i don't want to have to spend 6 hours just getting the wood from stock board to rough shape.
2) something to detail the rough shape to match the layout more precisely; if i can be satisfied with the shape
3) something to use for tillering; i imagine i am going to need some tool for major tillering and another minor tillering depending on how much wood i need to remove
4) something for the small features after everything is tillered like the knocks and arrow rest,
If i can get tool recommendations for each of these steps to reduce the amount of time and frustration beginners suffer, i would appreciate it a lot! Only problem is that i have a relatively low budget (around 60 dollars), on the bright side from what i have read a lot of people do entire bows with just a hatchet and a farriers rasp.
A problem that i am running in to is that i've never used these tools so i don't have any way to compare them in my mind. People say that the farrier rasp and shinto raw rasp take a ton of wood off quickly but does that compare to a coping saw or draw knife? And surprisingly there are no videos on youtube comparing different common bowyery tools and how fast they remove wood.
What can you guys recommend to a complete beginner that wants to keep costs low but still wants to use his time efficiently. I have read the forums here (before i signed up) and that's how i put together the above list, but i am too hesitant to commit to any tools. I know you can make a bow with just 400 grit sandpaper, but there's no reason to use that starting with the board all the way to the knocks. If i can get from stock wood to placing on the tillering tree in 5-6 hours of time spent with the wood (not including the time spent for glue to dry, etc) that would be ideal. Then i imagine i will spend another 4-6 hours tillering it. But since i've never made a bow before these are just estimates.
Impotant Note: i don't have any woodworking tools except for a hammer right now. I have some extra pine 2x4 in the garage i can use to make a tillering tree, but even then i don't know what tool i would use to cut the notches in the tree with, would a coping saw be good for that? I have no clue.
Some extraneous questions from a beginner:
1) Do you cut the knocks and arrow rest, and handle shape out of the wood before tillering. I imagine if you do it after tillering it will change the tiller a lot.
2) What is a stave? I keep hearing about staves vs board bows and i am googling but all google comes up with is that a stave is a straight grain piece of wood from a tree. Is there something more to it?